Type | Corporate Author |
Title | Availability and Reliability of Education Finance Data in Household Surveys |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2017 |
Page numbers | 0-0 |
URL | http://uis.unesco.org/sites/default/files/documents/availability-reliability-education-finance-data-household-surveys_0.pdf |
Abstract | This report examines the availability and reliability of data on household expenditure on education for the production and analysis of Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) indicator 4.5.4 (education expenditure per student by level of education and source of funding) and other relevant indicators based on household expenditure on education.1 The UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS) collects information on household expenditure with its Survey of Formal Education that is sent annually to all UNESCO Member States. The questionnaire on educational expenditure is designed to gather internationally comparable data for all levels of formal education by source of funding (government, international, private), destination, and type of expenditure.2 However, few countries report data on private spending to the UIS. Gaps in data collected from countries can in theory be filled with information from national household surveys, but these are primarily tailored to meet national data needs and may apply different methods and standards. In some cases, differences between national data collections can also be linked to limited provision of technical assistance to countries and inappropriate methodological decisions. By looking at the characteristics of education expenditure data gathered in various household surveys and the information required for producing education finance indicators, this report aims to determine which surveys can be used to calculate the internationally comparable indicators needed for monitoring of international goals. This document presents the findings from an analysis of education finance metadata based on information from household survey questionnaires compiled by the International Household Survey Network (IHSN). The surveys were screened by the UIS based on a set of minimum criteria and classified according to their degree of usefulness for the purpose of calculating education expenditure indicators. To be usable for the calculation of international indicators, a survey should collect data on a minimum set of expenditure items covering the most important education expenses. This includes tuition fees, other required fees, expenses for textbooks, expenses for other education materials, and spending for uniforms and other required clothing. Ideally, the expenses should be collected at the level of individual household members and the survey must include information on the current level of education of each household member attending school. This report comprises six sections, including this introduction. Section 2 summarizes the IHSN dataset used for the analysis. Section 3 describes the international frameworks on which UIS household education expenditure data are based. Section 4 highlights the content of the different surveys and discusses the characteristics of the expenditure data available for analysis and indicator calculation. Section 5 focuses on the minimum requirements for calculation of education expenditure indicators and assesses the surveys’ degree of usefulness for that purpose. Finally, section 6 concludes the paper with some recommendations for data collection with future household surveys in order to yield reliable and internationally comparable data on education finance. |